Revision as of 15:53, 19 November 2008 by Adbishel (Talk)

anyone has any idea how to do this question? Some hints at least. My work is based on pg 358 Example 7.
-ngw

I'm doing a similar thing. I used the same example and came up with {1, 5^1/3, 5^2/3} ....does anyone know if this is right??

--- This is what I got for the basis over Q. In order to get the rest of the elements, you have to form linear combinations of these basis elements though. -Josh

Yea, that's what I got too. I just made a linear combination of the basis elements with all of them in Q.

Alumni Liaison

Abstract algebra continues the conceptual developments of linear algebra, on an even grander scale.

Dr. Paul Garrett